A Dead Comet in the Shape of a Skull to Pass by Earth on Halloween
NASA has determined that the celestial object, which will pass safely by the Earth, is most likely a dead comet.
Your Halloween skies just got a little bit spookier: NASA says that tonight a dead comet [http://www.escapistmagazine.com/news/view/161236-Rosettas-Comet-Churyumov-Gerasimenko-Baffles-Astronomers-By-Venting-Oxygen-Into-Space#&gid=gallery_4943&pid=1], shaped like a skull, is due to pass just outside the moon's orbit.
How can you tell when a comet is dead, let alone a comet at all? Vishnu Reddy, at the Planetary Science Institute, explains: "We found that the object reflects about six percent of the light it receives from the sun... that suggests it could be cometary in origin - but as there is no coma evident, the conclusion is it is a dead comet."
The "coma" that Reddy refers to is the vaporous cloud that surrounds most comets, giving them a "fuzzy" appearance. The Halloween object is likely all out of substances that sublimate when it approaches the sun, thus the moniker of a "dead comet."
Those of us in North America will have a hard time actually viewing the skull-shaped visitor - it will be closest to Earth shortly after lunch, Eastern time - but you can follow its progress all the same through NASA's websites [http://www.nasa.gov/feature/halloween-skies-to-include-dead-comet-flyby].
So for those of you looking for a last-minute costume idea with access to a lot of quick-drying papier maché, there you have it: spooky comet!
Source: NASA [http://www.nasa.gov/feature/halloween-skies-to-include-dead-comet-flyby]
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NASA has determined that the celestial object, which will pass safely by the Earth, is most likely a dead comet.
Your Halloween skies just got a little bit spookier: NASA says that tonight a dead comet [http://www.escapistmagazine.com/news/view/161236-Rosettas-Comet-Churyumov-Gerasimenko-Baffles-Astronomers-By-Venting-Oxygen-Into-Space#&gid=gallery_4943&pid=1], shaped like a skull, is due to pass just outside the moon's orbit.
How can you tell when a comet is dead, let alone a comet at all? Vishnu Reddy, at the Planetary Science Institute, explains: "We found that the object reflects about six percent of the light it receives from the sun... that suggests it could be cometary in origin - but as there is no coma evident, the conclusion is it is a dead comet."
The "coma" that Reddy refers to is the vaporous cloud that surrounds most comets, giving them a "fuzzy" appearance. The Halloween object is likely all out of substances that sublimate when it approaches the sun, thus the moniker of a "dead comet."
Those of us in North America will have a hard time actually viewing the skull-shaped visitor - it will be closest to Earth shortly after lunch, Eastern time - but you can follow its progress all the same through NASA's websites [http://www.nasa.gov/feature/halloween-skies-to-include-dead-comet-flyby].
So for those of you looking for a last-minute costume idea with access to a lot of quick-drying papier maché, there you have it: spooky comet!
Source: NASA [http://www.nasa.gov/feature/halloween-skies-to-include-dead-comet-flyby]
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